On 11/10/2024 00:01, Javier Carrasco wrote: > On 10/10/2024 23:43, Al Viro wrote: >> On Thu, Oct 10, 2024 at 11:25:56PM +0200, Javier Carrasco wrote: >>> >>> diff --git a/drivers/input/misc/sparcspkr.c b/drivers/input/misc/sparcspkr.c >>> index 20020cbc0752..bb1c732c8f95 100644 >>> --- a/drivers/input/misc/sparcspkr.c >>> +++ b/drivers/input/misc/sparcspkr.c >>> @@ -188,7 +188,6 @@ static int bbc_beep_probe(struct platform_device *op) >>> { >>> struct sparcspkr_state *state; >>> struct bbc_beep_info *info; >>> - struct device_node *dp; >>> int err = -ENOMEM; >>> >>> state = kzalloc(sizeof(*state), GFP_KERNEL); >>> @@ -199,14 +198,13 @@ static int bbc_beep_probe(struct platform_device *op) >>> state->event = bbc_spkr_event; >>> spin_lock_init(&state->lock); >>> >>> - dp = of_find_node_by_path("/"); >>> err = -ENODEV; >>> + struct device_node *dp __free(device_node) = of_find_node_by_path("/"); >>> if (!dp) >>> goto out_free; >> >> Sigh... See that >> state = kzalloc(sizeof(*state), GFP_KERNEL); >> if (!state) >> goto out_err; >> above? >> >> IOW, this will quietly generate broken code if built with gcc (and refuse to >> compile with clang). Yeah, this one is trivially fixed (return -ENOMEM instead >> of a goto), but... >> >> __cleanup() can be useful, but it's really *not* safe for blind use; you >> need to watch out for changed scopes (harmless in case of device_node) >> and for gotos (broken here). > > Hi Al Viro, > > sorry, but I think I don't get you. First, I don't see sparc64 as a > supported architecture for clang in the Linux documentation. Maybe the > documentation is not up-to-date, but I tried to compile with clang and > it seems to be true that it is not supported. Anyway, that is not the > issue here. > > Second, I might be missing something about the scopes you are > mentioning. 'state' gets allocated before the device_node is declared, > and when the device_node is declared and its initialization fails, it > should jump to 'out_free' to free 'state', shouldn't it? Sorry if I have > overlooked something here. > > Thank your for your feedback and best regards, > Javier Carrasco > I think that the issue you are talking about is that the goto will trigger the cleanup function of the device_node, which will not be initialized at that point. Yes, the goto before the device_node declaration hurts, and a return as you said would be better. Thanks and best regards, Javier Carrasco